Hamlin v. Jendayi

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 18, 2024
DocketA167695
StatusPublished

This text of Hamlin v. Jendayi (Hamlin v. Jendayi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamlin v. Jendayi, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 10/17/24 CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

DELLA HAMLIN et al., Plaintiffs and Respondents, A167695 v. (Alameda County ZAKIYA JENDAYI, as Trustee, etc., Super. Ct. No. RP20061734) Defendant and Appellant.

Dr. Laura Dean Head passed away in 2013, survived by her sisters, respondents Della Hamlin and Helaine Head. Two months before her death, Dr. Head went into hospice care at the home of a former student and friend, appellant Zakiya Jendayi, and during that time, Dr. Head executed a trust instrument naming Jendayi as the trustee and sole beneficiary of the trust. In 2020, respondents petitioned the probate court to invalidate the trust on the grounds of undue influence, lack of capacity, and forgery. After a 17-day bench trial, the court granted the petition, finding Jendayi exerted undue influence over Dr. Head to execute the trust instrument. In the published portion of this opinion, we conclude that respondents, as intestate heirs of Dr. Head disinherited by the trust, had standing to contest the instrument in the probate court and that their petition was not

* Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this opinion is certified for publication with the exception of parts B., C., and D. of the Discussion.

1 barred under Probate Code section 17200. In the unpublished portion of this opinion, we conclude substantial evidence supported the court’s application of the common law presumption of undue influence, as well as its finding that Jendayi unduly influenced Dr. Head to execute the trust instrument. We also reject Jendayi’s claims of judicial bias and conclude any deficiencies in the probate court’s statement of decision were harmless. Accordingly, we will affirm the judgment. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Factual History At all relevant times, Dr. Head was employed as a college professor at San Francisco State University (SFSU). She and Jendayi met in 1985 when Jendayi was a student at SFSU. The two kept in touch over the years, and on a few occasions, Dr. Head provided letters of recommendation for Jendayi when she applied to graduate schools. At trial, Jendayi described her relationship with Dr. Head as “intimate and personal,” “special,” “physical,” and “sacred,” but she refused to elaborate further on privacy grounds. Jendayi also submitted documentary evidence of their relationship, including photographs of the two at social events, and letters and cards that she had sent to Dr. Head over the years. One of Dr. Head’s former students testified seeing Jendayi and Dr. Head together in public on numerous occasions from 1988 through 2012. The following events occurred in 2013 unless otherwise noted. On April 2, SFSU requested a welfare check on Dr. Head after she failed to appear for work for over a week. Police officers found Dr. Head in an “uninhabitable” house with possums living in it. Dr. Head was reportedly “lying in [a] very small space in [a] hoarded room floor to ceiling.” She was

2 emaciated and unable to walk or state the date. Officers feared she “may die of self-neglect.” Dr. Head was admitted to Kaiser hospital in Oakland where she was diagnosed with gastroesophageal junction cancer, acute renal failure, chronic alcoholic cirrhosis, chronic anemia, nausea and vomiting, severe protein calorie malnutrition, pulmonary nodule, bacteriuria, and hypokalemia. Medical records showed that Dr. Head had recently experienced significant weight loss—eight pounds in the past month and 70 pounds in past two years—and had not eaten or had any liquids in almost a week. Dr. Head’s medical records identified her “sister” as the “DPOA” (or durable power of attorney) and listed Hamlin as her sole emergency contact. However, Dr. Head reported to a social worker at the hospital that she was “estranged from her two sisters.” At trial, social worker Jennifer Hopping testified that she provided Dr. Head with various brochures and forms, including a power of attorney form, and asked Dr. Head whom she wanted to make medical decisions on her behalf. Dr. Head identified Jendayi and confirmed she did not want her family to be contacted. On April 9, while still hospitalized, Dr. Head executed a power of attorney and an advanced healthcare directive naming Jendayi as her primary agent. Jendayi was present during the signing. By its terms, the power of attorney was not effective until a licensed physician declared Dr. Head to be incapacitated. Hamlin testified that she visited her sister briefly in her hospital room, and that Dr. Head “perked up a little bit” when Hamlin touched her hand. After Hamlin was told by a nurse to wait outside, Hamlin received a phone call from Jim Rogers, a retreat operations director, who told her that Dr. Head was supposed to attend a retreat from April 9th to the 14th. Rogers

3 said he contacted Hamlin because Dr. Head had identified her as an emergency contact while registering for the retreat. Hamlin further testified that she “ ‘had words’ ” with Jendayi, whom she met for the first time at the hospital, because Jendayi was not forthcoming about Dr. Head’s condition and refused to allow Hamlin to make copies of the durable power of attorney and advanced healthcare directive. Regarding the reports of estrangement between the sisters, Hamlin acknowledged in her testimony that she saw Dr. Head “[v]ery rarely” because Dr. Head “had been drinking for quite a while and ended up removing herself from everyone.” The last time Hamlin saw Dr. Head was in or around 1997 or 1998. However, Hamlin never knew that Dr. Head wanted no contact with her. Helaine1 testified that she and Dr. Head were still close and that they often spent holidays together. Helaine denied the two were estranged and stated that “[e]verything changed when [Dr. Head] was in the hospital and [Jendayi] came in.” Helaine further testified she had never heard of Jendayi until Dr. Head fell ill. On April 12, Dr. Head was discharged from Kaiser on hospice, released into Jendayi’s care, and moved into Jendayi’s apartment. That same day, Jendayi transferred the title to Dr. Head’s vehicle to herself and added herself as the power of attorney to Dr. Head’s bank account. Dr. Head’s treating physician, Stephen Sarafian, M.D., issued a discharge letter dated April 12, stating that Dr. Head was “unable properly to care for herself, her person, and her property”; that she was “incapable of providing for her own needs for food, clothing, or shelter”; and that her

1 We use Helaine Head’s first name to avoid confusion. No disrespect is intended.

4 “mental state renders her unable to manage her own financial resources and/or to resist fraud or undue influence.” Asked at trial about reports that Dr. Head’s mental status improved after her discharge, Dr. Sarafian explained that mental status may fluctuate, but he still expected Dr. Head to undergo a “significant decline” from her cancer, and he maintained that the statements in his letter were true to a reasonable medical certainty. In early April, Jendayi contacted attorney Elaine Lee by telephone and asked her to draft an estate plan for Dr. Head. Jendayi testified that she did so on instructions from Dr. Head. Lee sent Jendayi a client intake form and an attorney-client fee agreement, which Jendayi completed. The fee agreement named Jendayi, not Dr. Head, as Lee’s client, and Dr. Head’s name was not mentioned anywhere in the agreement. Lee testified that Jendayi said she signed the fee agreement on Dr. Head’s behalf under the power of attorney. In the client intake form, Jendayi identified herself as acting under a power of attorney. She further indicated that Dr. Head’s assets included, among other things, a residence on Randolph Avenue in Oakland.

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Hamlin v. Jendayi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamlin-v-jendayi-calctapp-2024.